
By
James M. Dorsey for New Age Islam
18 April
2024
In
February, the Biden administration asked Israel to stop targeting Hamas’ police
force that was providing security for aid trucks entering Gaza and attempting
to restore a semblance of law and order.

A woman reacts as she watches a search for bodies near Al-Shifa Hospital
in Gaza City on Wednesday
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“In the
absence of an alternative governance structure and continued inaction, Israel
effectively perpetuates Hamas' civilian rule in Gaza, aiding in its resurgence
for years to come,” commented Israeli journalist Yoav Zitun.
Israel’s
assault on Gaza has dealt body blows to Hamas in other ways, even if it has
unsuccessfully sought to use hunger and lack of medical care as a catalyst for
popular revolt against the group.
Splits have
emerged between Hamas’ leaders in Gaza, who are believed to be hiding in
underground tunnels shielded by hostages abducted during the group’s attack on
Israel on October 7 of last year, and its representatives in exile over how to
handle ceasefire and prisoner exchange negotiations with Israel and its future
strategy.
Hamas is
also feeling the heat of growing criticism of the group for provoking the
Israeli assault that has devastated Gaza and reduced its 2.3 million
inhabitants to destitution.
In late
March, Hamas felt compelled to issue a lengthy statement apologising to Gazans
for their suffering.
Hamas
thanked Gazans for their resilience and acknowledged their “exhaustion.” The
group said it was trying to alleviate the “difficulties” Gazans faced by among
others attempting to impose “price controls,” but its capabilities were limited
“because of the ongoing aggression.”
Prices in
Gaza have shot up astronomically with, for example, 30 eggs that cost US$2-3
before the war selling for US35-40. Prices have begun to drop with the recent
increased flow of food into Gaza.
Hamas said
it was discussing ways to “resolve the problems caused by the (Israeli)
occupation” with other armed factions, popular committees, and “families,” a
reference to clans that Israel has sought to engage in creating an alternative
post-war governance structure for Gaza.
At the same
time, the statement reiterated that the war would ultimately achieve
Palestinian “victory and freedom.”
It’s
difficult to assess public sentiments in Gaza.
The
Palestine Centre for Policy and Survey Research produces the only credible
regular public opinion polling in Gaza and the West Bank.
Fifty-two
per cent of Gaza respondents in March said they favoured a return to Hamas rule
as opposed to the West Bank-based, internationally recognised Palestine
Authority, an Arab peacekeeping force, the United Nations, or Israel.
The
Centre’s polling suggests that Gazan public opinion may be split, but
assessments of the strength of anti-Hamas sentiment are primarily based on
anecdotal evidence. Moreover, Hamas critics assert that Hamas represses
expressions of criticism, complicating the gauging of anti-Hamas sentiment.
“So many
Gazans are forced to use aliases and hide their true identities when speaking
out against Hamas & the horrendous impact of life under the Islamist
group's violent and authoritarian rule… Conformity is strictly enforced;
differing views and alternative opinions will not be tolerated and could result
in harassment, attacks, delegitimization, and even violence,” said Ahmed Fouad
Alkhatib, an anti-Hamas Palestinian-American, who hails from Gaza, keeps close
contact with the Strip, and says he has lost 31 relatives in the
seven-month-old Gaza war.
Few will
doubt that Hamas does what it can to suppress dissent. Yet, it's unclear how
effective the group can be while under relentless Israeli assault.
Even so,
Gazan Hamas critics’ attempts to shield themselves complicate assessments of
which social media postings are genuine and which are part of mis- or
disinformation campaigns.
Mr.
Alkhatib vouches for the authenticity of Mohammed al-Falastin, a Hamas critic
he knows personally, who uses a pseudonym to express his views on Twitter.
“Hamas does
not represent me, and what happened was not my choice and has nothing to do
with me or my family. We are victims of mentally disturbed and mentally ill
people who control our lives with iron and fire. I, my family, and many others
in Gaza did not choose the path of Hamas,” Mr. Al-Falastin tweeted on April 12.
Reporting
in The Atlantic on a recent visit to the Middle East during which he met Gazans
living in exile, Mr. Alkhatib, whose brother and family were fired at by
Israeli tanks as they fled Gaza City on Israel’s instructions, paints a far
more layered picture of the displacement of a majority of the Strip’s
population.
Israel
insists that it has sought to avoid civilian casualties, in part by
distributing millions of leaflets, phone calls, and text messages that called
on Palestinians to evacuate to safe zones, which more often proved to be
everything but.
Palestinians
say that in some instances, they were given as little as a minute to evacuate
before Israel attacked their building.
The
physical devastation of Gaza and the high casualty rate, which the Gaza health
ministry puts at more than 33,000 dead and 70,000+ wounded, suggests that, in
the best of cases, Israeli efforts were ineffective.
Mr.
Alkhatib does not absolve Israel of responsibility for “horrendous acts against
civilians, whether due to indifference, recklessness, or vengefulness.”
However, he also points a finger at Hamas.
“The
Islamist terror group appears solely focused on its operational and tactical
survival, regardless of the strategic consequences of its actions or the damage
it inflicts on the Palestinian cause,” Mr. Alkhatib wrote.
Mr.
Alkhatib charged that Hamas fighters had placed roadside bombs on Gaza’s
north-south Al-Rashid highway in November and opened fire on Palestinians
fleeing the north.
Similarly,
he charges Hamas, and supportive clerics cite a Quranic verse that prohibits
turning one’s back to the enemy when facing them on the battlefield to persuade
Gazans to stay in their homes rather than seek safety elsewhere.
Hamas’
strategy was to keep the north populated in a bid to make it more difficult for
the Israeli military to operate, according to Mr. Alkhatib.
Hamas may
have persuaded some to follow its advice, but the fact that most Gazans are
displaced suggests that the Hamas strategy, like the Israeli efforts, largely
failed.
Social
media and mis-and disinformation scholar Marc Owen Jones took Mr. Alkhatib to
task for some of his sourcing.
In doing
so, Mr. Jones highlighted Gaza-related information wars that will determine the
outcome of the Gaza war as much as developments on the ground.
Mr.
Alkhatib hyperlinked an Israeli newspaper report quoting Amjad Taha, a
journalist who espouses pro-Israeli and anti-Hamas views and whom Mr. Jones
describes as a “known disinfluencer,” as the source for the Al-Rashid incident.
Mr.
Alkhatib also hyperlinked an Israeli media report on an Israeli military
statement on an earlier incident in which Hamas allegedly killed 70 fleeing
Palestinians that has been called into question by independent reporting.
“By all
means. criticize Hamas, but not on the basis of non-credible or plausible
narratives,” Mr. Jones tweeted in a thread that sought to debunk Mr. AlKhatib’s
assertions.
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Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning
journalist and scholar, an Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang Technological
University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, and the author of
the syndicated column and podcast, The Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
URL: https://newageislam.com/islam-politics/israel-hamas-islamist-terror-zionist/d/132153
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